Delaware River Basin Commission Advances in Implementation of Antidegradation Policies and Practices in Delaware River Basin Commission Special Protection Waters DRBC Science and Water Quality Management Scenic Rivers Monitoring Program Delaware Estuary Science & Environmental Summit 2017 Robert Limbeck, Sr. Aquatic Biologist January 23, 2017
Special Protection Waters Reaches of the Delaware River
Special Protection Waters designated for entire non‐ tidal Delaware River SPW rules cover ≈6,780 of the 13,800 sq. mi. Delaware River Basin watershed area DRBC/NPS Scenic Rivers Monitoring Program (SRMP) ~200 miles of Delaware River + most tributary watersheds) 2
Special Protection Waters Objective: Antidegradation of Existing Water Quality
• It is the policy of the Commission that there be no measurable change in existing water quality except towards natural conditions in waters considered by the Commission to have exceptionally high scenic, recreational, ecological, and/or water supply values. – Sec 3.10.3A.2.
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What is EWQ? Policy, Not Criteria Restore by TMDL=$$$$$
Protect=$ 4
SPW Program Advancements Since the Delaware Riverkeeper Petitions to DRBC and Initial Rulemaking • First Assessment of Measurable Change was successfully completed • See Lower Delaware Measurable Change Assessment 2016 • Site‐Specific Existing Water Quality is complete for 85 sites and growing • See Existing Water Quality Atlas of Delaware Basin SPW 2016 • Cumulative Watershed Assessment of Discharges with Models • Occurs during No Measurable Change Evaluation step of permitting • Outreach is improving • Interactive Story Map service using ARC‐MAP • Building R code, Shiny Apps, Dashboards to view water quality information • USGS tools and studies have contributed greatly to SRMP success • SRMP is integrated and complimentary with State monitoring • U.S. EPA and NPS support have been critical to SRMP capabilities 5
Lower Delaware Measurable Change Assessment 2009‐2011
DRBC Publication is Available Released (pdf) July 2016 Executive Summary, 24 Chapters (one per site): Within‐site measurable changes 3 Appendices: New ICP/BCP sites Statistical Guide Flow Estimation Methods http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/home/newsroom/news/approved/20160808_LDSPW‐EWQrpt.html 6
Boundary Control Points (BCP) are located on tributaries near park boundary or near confluence with river Interstate Control Points (ICP) are located on interstate river sites at accessible locations between tributaries
Lower Delaware (LDEL) Sites EWQ established 2000‐ 2004 (n=40‐50) SPW Rules passed 2008 Designated as Significant Resource Waters Assessment 1: 2009‐2011 Assessment 2 planned 2019‐2021
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Summary Matrix of Measurable Changes: 440 Within‐Site Comparisons at a Glance Good News: 88% of water quality tests showed no degradation Site Color Key
Dark Blue =Interstate Control Point (ICP) Del. River at Trenton
Parameter
Site---> Site Number---> 1343 ICP
Dark Red
=Pennsylvania Tributary Boundary Control Point (BCP)
Pidcock Creek, PA
Delaware River at Lambrtvlle
Wickecheoke Creek, NJ
Lockatong Creek, NJ
Delaware River at Bulls Island
Paunacussing Creek, PA
Tohickon Creek, PA
Tinicum Creek, PA
Nishisakawick Creek, NJ
Del. River Cooks at Milford Creek, PA
Musconetcong River, NJ
1418 ICP
1463 BCP
1487 ICP
1525 BCP
1540 BCP
1554 ICP
1556 BCP
1570 BCP
1616 BCP
1641 BCP
1677 ICP 1737 BCP
1746 BCP
Del. River Pohat-cong at Rieglsvll Creek, NJ
1748 ICP
1774 BCP
Lehigh River, PA
Del. River Bushkill Martins at Easton Creek, PA Creek, PA
1837 BCP
1838 ICP
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~ ~
Pequest River, NJ
1841 BCP 1907 BCP 1978 BCP
Del. River at Paulins Kill Del. River Belvidere River, NJ at Portland 1978 ICP
2070 BCP
2074 ICP
~ ~
Dissolved Oxygen (DO) mg/l
Field
Dark Green =New Jersey Tributary Boundary Control Point (BCP)
Del. River at Washngtn Crossing
Dissolved Oxygen Saturation % pH, units Water Temperature, degrees C
Nutrients
Ammonia Nitrogen as N, Total mg/l
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Nitrate + Nitrite as N, Total mg/l Nitrogen as N, Total (TN) mg/l Nitrogen, Kjeldahl, Total (TKN) mg/l Orthophosphate as P, Total mg/l
Bacteria
Phosphorus as P, Total (TP) mg/l
~ **
Enterococcus colonies/100 ml Escherichia coli colonies/100 ml
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**
~ **
**
**
** **
** **
**
**
**
**
~ ** **
Fecal coliform colonies/100 ml
Conventionals
Alkalinity as CaCO3, Total mg/l Hardness as CaCO3, Total mg/l
** **
Chloride, Total mg/l Specific Conductance µmho/cm
** ~
** **
** **
** **
** **
** **
** ~
** **
** ~
** ~
** **
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Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) mg/l Total Suspended Solids (TSS) mg/l Turbidity NTU KEY
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= No indication of measurable change to EWQ
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= Indication of measurable water quality change toward more degraded status
~
= Weak indication of measurable water quality change toward more degraded status
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Lower Delaware Assessment Findings: Measurable Changes 2000‐2011 88% of tests revealed no evidence of water quality degradation; many revealed water quality improvement. Nutrients improved at many sites since 2000. Only Pohatcong Creek increased. Chlorides and Specific Conductance increased at almost all locations (winter road salting is most likely cause). Further continuous monitoring underway; we want to work with co‐regulators on issue. E. Coli concentrations increased from Frenchtown southward. Enterococcus is too variable an indicator for measurable change assessment. DRBC/NPS data compare well with USGS and State data. 30+ samples provide best resolution to detect measurable change. Detection limits now low enough to measure conc. in high quality streams. 9
Water Quality Improvement Examples
Lehigh River: Kjeldahl Nitrogen
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Lehigh River: Total Phosphorus
SPW management actions may have contributed to Lehigh River nutrient reductions through numerous project review dockets. Concentrations are still high, but results may be early indication of SPW effectiveness. Improvements were statistically significant.
No Measurable Change Evaluation for Docket holders
New Docket or Renewal
Substantial Alterations or Additions
Non‐point source load
Model Calibration Validation
Water Quality Model (QUAL2K) point source load
NMC Evaluation Effluent Limitation
Ambient WQ
Cumulative Impact Assessment
To date, of >150 SPW dockets, 33 had NMC evaluations for wastewater permits. Of these, 21 have resulted in effluent limitations maintain EWQ. (Namsoo Suk, personal communication 9/12/16).
Existing Water Quality Definitions are contained in our Water Quality Regulations and in the new EWQ Atlas
Two Key Aspects of No Measurable Change Evaluations 1.
Implementation to preserve NMC • Establishes wasteload allocations among sources to maintain EWQ utilizing WQ models where possible • Sets effluent limitations in a docket and/or permit • Not a TMDL • Manages water quality before exceedances occur
2. Assessment of NMC • Set multi‐year instream monitoring program
Designed to preserve existing high water quality
Water Quality Models Neversink River Watershed (NY) (~ 30 dischargers)
Brodhead Creek Watershed (PA) Lehigh River Watershed (PA)
(~ 30 dischargers)
Lower Delaware River (PA/NJ) Multiple BCPs/ICPs
(~ 100 dischargers) (~ 65 dischargers)
Existing Water Quality Atlas of the Delaware River Special Protection Waters Maps, Watershed Population, Land Use & Flow Statistics, and Site‐Specific Existing Water Quality Tables from West Branch Delaware River to Trenton 85 River Reaches & Watersheds 88 by 2018 Upper Delaware: 11 ICP’s, 19 BCP tribs. Middle Delaware: 7 ICP’s, 20 BCP tribs. Lower Delaware: 10 ICP’s, 18 BCP tribs. (28 DR sites & 57 tributary watersheds) Best existing scientific knowledge of water quality, flow and characteristics of the Delaware River and its tributaries.
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Planned Annual Updates and Additions including discharge inventory, new sites and parameters, updated population and land use, improved flow estimation.
Contacts We are available to meet about more detailed discussion of these products. There are many more slides and details: see me for more or request a presentation tailored to your organization! Robert Limbeck, Senior Aquatic Biologist. SRMP & Lower Delaware Project Manager; Delaware River Biomonitoring Project Manager. 609‐883‐9500 ext. 230
[email protected] John Yagecic, P.E. Manager, Water Quality Assessment. 609‐883‐9500 ext. 271
[email protected] Dr. Namsoo Suk, PhD. Manager, Water Quality Modeling. 609‐883‐9500 ext. 305
[email protected] Thomas Fikslin, PhD. Director, Science and Water Quality Management. 609‐883‐9500 ext. 253
[email protected] 16